See Jennifer Lawrence avoid wardrobe malfunction at the Berlin Hunger Games
The overall observation and view of the said film revealed how ‘The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 2’ will run its course after what has been expected comparatively with the first installment of the last part of the trilogy.
Jennifer Lawrence’s essay on inequality was inspired by her “Hunger Games” character.
Louisville native Jennifer Lawrence wore a long-sleeved plum dress at the premiere and assured fans the last “Hunger Games” movie would be their favorite one.
The star was so excited about her headpiece she couldn’t resist taking a snap before she hit the carpet, posting an Instagram modeling her “head gear”.
She added, “So I think it would be impossible to go four years with this character and not be inspired by her”. “The Katniss we behold in the epilogue, set a few years later, is unquestionably an older, wiser person – and gratefully retired from public life”.
“I’m going to kill Snow”, Katniss says in the clip.
“Join the revolution this November 18 when The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2” invades cinemas nationwide from Pioneer Films.
Speaking about the development of her character from a reluctant hero to an impassioned leader, Lawrence said that she initially found the slow-burning nature of Katniss’ character development problematic, but had set aside those feelings for her performance. She has made a whopping twelve movies during that time, including Silver Linings Playbook, for which she won the Academy Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role.
Jennifer, meanwhile, spoke about how she was inspired by Katniss’s fearless streak. There wasn’t even, like, an intermediate period, I just went poof…
Lawrence’s essay came months after it was revealed, via the Sony hack, that she was paid less for American Hustle than her male costars. But there is still something else, if you make a film, 12 hours a day, 5 days the week together, the close will fail me. As he died a week before finishing filming the final movie, it will be bitter-sweet to see him on screen for the final time.
Director Francis Lawrence said he felt inspired by Berlin, whose very big Nazi-era Tempelhof airport building, a crucial airhub during the Cold War, serves as the setting for an explosive battle of good versus evil in the movie.